Society's Child
Turns out adults don't like being told by a child how to live their lives.
German drivers have begun displaying 'f*ck you Greta' bumper stickers to protest against being lectured about global warming by a 16-year-old child.
Greta Thunberg is a Swedish teen climate activist who has been heavily promoted by the establishment and was placed on the front cover of Time Magazine back in May.
Ingmar Rentzhog, founder of the non-profit We Don't Have Time Foundation, claimed to have 'discovered' Thunberg and used her to push climate change messaging.
Comment: This is one of only a handful of US media reports about this event that did not either insinuate that Trump pushed for this event in order to declare the US a dictatorship, downplay its massive turnout, or suggest that, because it rained, 'God' disfavors Trump. This 'unreality' in the US infosphere is an extraordinary indicator of the chasm that exists between elites and people in the USA.

People react to a military fly-over on the National Mall while President Donald Trump gives his speech during Fourth of July festivities.
Speaking before a cheering crowd that repeatedly erupted in chants of "USA! USA!," Trump hailed US innovations in science, medicine and space exploration during his 45-minute "Salute to America" speech on the National Mall in Washington, DC.
Comment: What was so hard about this event for Trump's powerful enemies - themselves mostly American and otherwise similarly die-hard 'exceptionalists' - to accept?
In what way do they perceive - or merely instinctively sense - that it hurts their plans or power?
Is it because the foundational tenet of America's independence means independence from Britain, about which America's Transatlanticists are ultra-sensitive?
Is it because the military should never be seen to be 'with' the president, but 'independent', thus controlled from the shadows?
Is it because they're vaguely self-aware that their military conduct is shameful, especially relative to its righteous use by rivals like Russia?
America, a land of strange contradictions!

Reported picture of Losharik - Reports say that the Losharik, also called the AS-12, was on a research mission to measure sea depths in the Barents Sea within Russian territorial waters.
Russian President Putin has now confirmed it was indeed a nuclear-powered submarine after officials declined to reveal even the most basic details, citing its "secret mission". As CBS reports:
Putin met Thursday with Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, who had returned from the Navy's Arctic base of Severomorsk, and asked him about the submersible's nuclear reactor. Shoigu said the reactor is "completely isolated now" and it is "in full working order."The blaze has been identified as starting in the sub's battery compartment and spreading from there, causing 14 crewmen to succumb to smoke inhalation, while an undisclosed number survived. Norwegian officials had also previously reported that they have discovered no unusual levels of radiation near the accident.
Comment: RT adds that the fire broke out in the sub's battery compartment:
The nuclear reactor on the submersible has been fully isolated," Sergey Shoigi told President Vladimir Putin.See also:
The vessel's crew also "conducted all necessary measures to protect the reactor. It's fully functional. So we hope the repair of the submersible can be done quickly."
The main cause of the tragedy was a fire which broke out in the sub's battery compartment and "managed to somewhat spread." Battery malfunction was earlier viewed as the likely cause of the deadly blaze by Russian defense experts.
The president and the minister also discussed compensation for the families of the 14 officers who died in the fire.
"We are working with each family individually," Shoigu said, adding that "all necessary help will be provided."
- Russian MoD names naval officers who perished in deep sea sub fire - Full info remains classified
- At least 14 Russian Navy servicemen have died in fire on Russian deep submersible - UPDATE
Aviner told an Israeli broadcaster on Thursday that "It's not ok" for Shaked to head up the Union of Right Wing Parties (URWP), adding "the complicated whirlwind of politics is not the arena for the female role."
Aviner's comments come on the heels of a letter which he signed alongside dozens of fellow religious leaders urging the URWP to back a "God fearing and Torah observant" candidate, though the rabbi went further than the letter itself, which did not single out Shaked.
Though she served as a member of the Knesset for the Orthodox Jewish Home Party until 2018, Shaked is an avowed secularist.
The rabbi provoked a torrent of disapproval from lawmakers across the spectrum of Israeli politics, who slammed the comments as bigoted.
Comment: No stranger to controversy, indeed:
- Are Jews required to burn churches? After Notre Dame, Israeli rabbi says, "It's complicated"
- IDF rabbinate publication during Gaza war: We will show no mercy on the cruel
Migrants in Tijuana shelters said they are alarmed after reports of single mothers being approached by groups of men who have offered to buy children to improve their chances of safely crossing into the United States.
A decades-old legal document, known as the Flores agreement, says migrant children should only be held briefly in U.S. border custody, which often means they are released, along with the parent or guardian with whom they crossed while they wait for their asylum cases to make their way through clogged immigration courts.
Typically, when migrants are apprehended at the border with their children they are held in custody for a few days before they are released. Single adults who cross the border can face months in detention.
U.S. border authorities have been warning since June 2018 about people fraudulently using children who aren't theirs to pose as family units and gain entry into the United States, a claim that critics said was overblown.
But now, authorities in Tijuana are warning migrant mothers to keep their children close by and supervised, after reports of men offering to purchase migrant children in order to cross.
Realizing this will be a controversial event, the Pentagon has distributed instructions to service members participating in the shindig on what to do if approached by a reporter, and the advice is essentially this: Say you love your tank.
Since this is a military celebration, there's sure to be plenty of military personnel in attendance — alongside hordes of reporters angling to get the inside scoop from service members about what they really think of this whole celebration. Not on Trump's watch.
The influential cult comic book and later magazine was launched in 1952, thrilling a generation with its sharp observations and ridiculing of US culture, politics and the media. In its heyday in the 70s, its circulation was 2 million as readers relished its jabs at advertising, hippies, and politicians, spearing both Republicans and Democrats in equal measure. It's credited with teaching young people how to be skeptical of government and the media, and its longtime fans mourned the end of an era on social media on Thursday, sharing their favorite covers.
Senate Bill 188, which was recently passed by a unanimous margin in both the California State Assembly and Senate, will officially add hair-based discrimination associated with race to the state's anti-discrimination law.
The bill's text states that "the history of our nation is riddled with laws and societal norms that equated 'blackness,' and the associated physical traits, for example, dark skin, kinky and curly hair to a badge of inferiority, sometimes subject to separate and unequal treatment."
"This idea also permeated societal understanding of professionalism," the bill continues. "Professionalism was, and still is, closely linked to European features and mannerisms, which entails that those who do not naturally fall into Eurocentric norms must alter their appearances, sometimes drastically and permanently, in order to be deemed professional."
Comment: Actually, professionalism is even 'worse' than that. It also 'discriminates' against unprofessional Europeans. In fact, it turns out that anyone who wants to be considered a professional has to alter their appearance and mannerisms to some degree. That said, it is fairly ridiculous that some schools and employers to ban hairstyles like braids. The companies with laxer 'hair codes' will benefit in the long run - they're drawing on a wider pool of talent, after all.
The bill, dubbed the CROWN Act, also states that workplace policies prohibiting natural hair "including afros, braids, twists, and locks, have a disparate impact on Black individuals as these policies are more likely to deter Black applicants and burden or punish Black employees than any other group."
In an exclusive interview with RT, Schiff said that while there is a metallic asteroid in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, no one could know for sure what metals it contains.
"It is a rare metallic asteroid with a composition similar to the Earth's core. It's made almost entirely of an iron-nickel alloy, with small amounts of other metals, likely to include gold."
Director Rob Marshall said Bailey had been cast after an "extensive search" and possesses the "rare combination of spirit, heart, youth, innocence, and substance" needed to play the role.
Naturally, the announcement provoked cries of delight from some quarters and wails of dismay from others. Fans of the decision felt it was a big win for diversity, while critics argued that the remake should stay true to the 1989 original — in which Ariel, most will remember, was in fact a, blue-eyed and red-haired white girl — or mermaid, to be exact.
Comment: Bailey's hair better not be red in the film, otherwise its makers may be accused of natural hair discrimination...













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